[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 97 (Monday, May 22, 2017)]
[Notices]
[Pages 23301-23303]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-10345]


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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE

[OMB Number 1121-NEW]


Agency Information Collection Activities; Request for Comments; 
Revision of the BJS Confidentiality Pledge

AGENCY: Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Department of Justice.

ACTION: Notice.

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SUMMARY: The Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS), a component of the 
Office of Justice Programs (OJP) in the U.S. Department of Justice 
(DOJ), is seeking comments on revisions to the confidentiality pledge 
it provides to its respondents. These revisions are required by the 
passage and implementation of provisions of the federal Cybersecurity 
Enhancement Act of 2015, which requires the Secretary of the Department 
of Homeland Security (DHS) to provide Federal civilian agencies' 
information technology systems with cybersecurity protection for their 
Internet traffic. More details on this announcement are presented in 
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section below. The revisions to the 
confidentiality pledge were previously published in the Federal 
Register on March 20, 2017, allowing for a 60 day comment period. BJS 
received and responded to one comment.

DATES:  Comments are encouraged and will be accepted for 30 days until 
June 21, 2017.

ADDRESSES: Questions about this notice should be addressed to the 
Bureau of Justice Statistics, Office of Justice Programs, U.S. 
Department of Justice, ATTN: Devon Adams, 810 7th Street NW., 
Washington, D.C. 20531; email: [email protected]; telephone: 202-
307-0765 (this is not a toll-free number).

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Allina Lee by telephone at 202-305-
0765 (this is not a toll-free number); by email at 
[email protected]; or by mail or courier to the Bureau of Justice 
Statistics, Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice, 
ATTN: Allina Lee, 810 7th Street NW., Washington, D.C. 20531. Because 
of delays in the receipt of regular mail related to security screening, 
respondents are encouraged to use electronic communications.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

I. Abstract

    Federal statistics provide key information that the Nation uses to 
measure its performance and make informed choices about budgets, 
employment, health, investments, taxes, and a host of other significant 
topics. Most federal surveys are completed on a voluntary basis. 
Respondents, ranging from businesses to households to institutions, may 
choose whether or not to provide the requested information. Many of the 
most valuable federal statistics come from surveys that ask for highly 
sensitive information such as proprietary business data from companies 
or particularly personal information or practices from individuals. BJS 
protects all personally identifiable information collected under its 
authority under the confidentiality provisions of 42 U.S.C. Sec.  
3789g. Strong and trusted confidentiality and exclusively statistical 
use pledges under Title 42 U.S.C. Sec.  3789g and similar statutes are 
effective and necessary in honoring the trust that businesses, 
individuals, and institutions, by their responses, place in statistical 
agencies.
    Under statistical confidentiality protection statutes, federal 
statistical agencies make statutory pledges that the information 
respondents provide will be seen only by statistical agency personnel 
or their agents and will be used only for statistical purposes. These 
statutes protect such statistical information from administrative, law

[[Page 23302]]

enforcement, taxation, regulatory, or any other non-statistical use and 
immunize the information submitted to statistical agencies from legal 
process. Moreover, many of these statutes carry monetary fines and/or 
criminal penalties for conviction of a knowing and willful unauthorized 
disclosure of covered information. Any person violating the 
confidentiality provisions of 42 U.S.C. Sec.  3789g may be punished by 
a fine of up to $10,000, in addition to any other penalties imposed by 
law.
    As part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2016 
(Pub. L. No. 114-113) signed on December 17, 2015, the Congress 
included the Federal Cybersecurity Enhancement Act of 2015 (codified in 
relevant part at 6 U.S.C. Sec.  151). This act, among other provisions, 
permits and requires the Secretary of Homeland Security to provide 
federal civilian agencies' information technology systems with 
cybersecurity protection for their Internet traffic. The technology 
currently used to provide this protection against cyber malware is 
known as Einstein 3A. Einstein 3A electronically searches internet 
traffic in and out of federal civilian agencies in real time for 
malware signatures.
    When such a signature is found, the internet packets that contain 
the malware signature are shunted aside for further inspection by DHS 
personnel. Because it is possible that such packets entering or leaving 
a statistical agency's information technology system may contain a 
small portion of confidential statistical data, statistical agencies 
can no longer promise their respondents that their responses will be 
seen only by statistical agency personnel or their agents. However, 
federal statistical agencies can promise, in accordance with provisions 
of the Federal Cybersecurity Enhancement Act of 2015, that such 
monitoring can be used only to protect information and information 
systems from cybersecurity risks, thereby, in effect, providing 
stronger protection to the integrity of the respondents' submissions.
    Consequently, with the passage of the Federal Cybersecurity 
Enhancement Act of 2015, the federal statistical community has an 
opportunity to welcome the further protection of its confidential data 
offered by DHS' Einstein 3A cybersecurity protection program. The DHS 
cybersecurity program's objective is to protect federal civilian 
information systems from malicious malware attacks. The federal 
statistical system's objective is to endeavor to ensure that the DHS 
Secretary performs those essential duties in a manner that honors the 
statistical agencies' statutory promises to the public to protect their 
confidential data. DHS and the federal statistical system have been 
successfully engaged in finding a way to balance both objectives and 
achieve these mutually reinforcing objectives.
    However, pledges of confidentiality made pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 
Sec.  3789g and similar statutes assure respondents that their data 
will be seen only by statistical agency personnel or their agents. 
Because it is possible that DHS personnel could see some portion of 
those confidential data in the course of examining the suspicious 
Internet packets identified by Einstein 3A sensors, statistical 
agencies are revising their confidentiality pledges to reflect this 
process change. Therefore, BJS is providing this notice to alert the 
public to these confidentiality pledge revisions in an efficient and 
coordinated fashion.

II. Method of Collection

    The following is the revised statistical confidentiality pledge for 
applicable BJS data collections, with the new line added to address the 
new cybersecurity monitoring activities bolded for reference only:

    ``The Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) is authorized to 
conduct this data collection under 42 U.S.C. Sec.  3732. BJS is 
dedicated to maintaining the confidentiality of your personally 
identifiable information, and will protect it to the fullest extent 
under federal law. BJS, BJS employees, and BJS data collection 
agents will use the information you provide for statistical or 
research purposes only, and will not disclose your information in 
identifiable form without your consent to anyone outside of the BJS 
project team. All personally identifiable data collected under BJS's 
authority are protected under the confidentiality provisions of 42 
U.S.C. Sec.  3789g, and any person who violates these provisions may 
be punished by a fine up to $10,000, in addition to any other 
penalties imposed by law. Further, per the Cybersecurity Enhancement 
Act of 2015 (codified in relevant part at 6 U.S.C. Sec.  151), 
federal information systems are protected from malicious activities 
through cybersecurity screening of transmitted data. For more 
information on the federal statutes, regulations, and other 
authorities that govern how BJS, BJS employees, and BJS data 
collection agents collect, handle, store, disseminate, and protect 
your information, see the BJS Data Protection Guidelines--(https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/BJS_Data_Protection_Guidelines.pdf).''

    The following listing shows the current BJS Paperwork Reduction Act 
(PRA) OMB numbers and information collection titles whose 
confidentiality pledges will change to reflect the statutory 
implementation of DHS' Einstein 3A monitoring for cybersecurity 
protection purposes.

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           OMB control No.                Information collection title
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1121-0094............................  Deaths in Custody Reporting
                                        Program.
1121-0065............................  National Corrections Reporting
                                        Program.
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    Affected Public: Survey respondents to applicable BJS information 
collections.
    Total Respondents: Unchanged from current collection.
    Frequency: Unchanged from current collection.
    Total Responses: Unchanged from current collection.
    Average Time per Response: Unchanged from current collection.
    Estimated Total Burden Hours: Unchanged from current collection.
    Estimated Total Cost: Unchanged from current collection.
    BJS has also added information about the Cybersecurity Enhancement 
Act and Einstein 3A to the BJS Data Protection Guidelines to provide 
more details to interested respondents about the new cybersecurity 
monitoring requirements. The following text has been added to Section 
V. Information System Security and Privacy Requirements:

    ``The Cybersecurity Enhancement Act of 2015 (codified in 
relevant part at 6 U.S.C. Sec.  151) required the Department of 
Homeland Security (DHS) to provide cybersecurity protection for 
federal civilian agency information technology systems and to 
conduct cybersecurity screening of the Internet traffic going in and 
out of these systems to look for viruses, malware, and other 
cybersecurity threats. DHS has implemented this requirement by 
instituting procedures such that, if a potentially malicious malware 
signature were found, the Internet packets that contain the malware 
signature would be further inspected, pursuant to any required legal 
process, to identify and mitigate the cybersecurity threat. In 
accordance with the Act's provisions, DHS conducts these 
cybersecurity screening activities solely to protect federal 
information and information systems from cybersecurity risks. To 
comply with the Act's requirements and to increase the protection of 
information from cybersecurity threats, OJP facilitates, through the 
DOJ Trusted Internet Connection and DHS's EINSTEIN 3A system, the 
inspection of all information transmitted to and from OJP systems 
including, but not limited to, respondent data collected and 
maintained by BJS.''

    The Census Bureau collects data on behalf of BJS for BJS's National 
Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) and its supplements. These 
collections are protected under Title 13 U.S.C. Section 9. The Census 
Bureau issued a Federal Register notice (FRN) to revise its 
confidentiality pledge language to address the new cybersecurity 
screening

[[Page 23303]]

requirements (new line bolded for reference only):

    ``The U.S. Census Bureau is required by law to protect your 
information. The Census Bureau is not permitted to publicly release 
your responses in a way that could identify you. Per the Federal 
Cybersecurity Enhancement Act of 2015, your data are protected from 
cybersecurity risks through screening of the systems that transmit 
your data.''

    The following listing includes the BJS information collections that 
are administered by the Census Bureau whose confidentiality pledge will 
be revised.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
           OMB control No.                Information collection title
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1121-0111............................  NCVS.
1121-0184............................  School Crime Supplement to the
                                        NCVS.
1121-0317............................  Identity Theft Supplement to the
                                        NCVS.
1121-0260............................  Police Public Contact Supplement
                                        to the NCVS.
1121-0302............................  Supplemental Victimization Survey
                                        to the NCVS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Affected Public: Survey respondents to applicable BJS information 
collections.
    Total Respondents: Unchanged from current collection.
    Frequency: Unchanged from current collection.
    Total Responses: Unchanged from current collection.
    Average Time per Response: Unchanged from current collection.
    Estimated Total Burden Hours: Unchanged from current collection.
    Estimated Total Cost: Unchanged from current collection.
    The 60-day FRN submitted by the Census Bureau can be accessed at 
https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2016/12/23/2016-30959/agency-information-collection-activities-request-for-comments-revision-of-the-confidentiality-pledge. The Census Bureau is currently reviewing and 
preparing responses to the comments it received and will publish a 30-
day FRN to solicit additional public comment. Comments on the Census 
Bureau's revised confidentiality pledge should be submitted directly to 
the point-of-contact listed in the notice.

III. Data

    OMB Control Number: 1121-0358.
    Legal Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3506(e) and 42 U.S.C. 3789g.
    Form Number(s): None.

IV. Request for Comments

    Comments are invited on the efficacy of BJS's revised 
confidentiality pledge above. Comments submitted in response to this 
notice will become a matter of public record. BJS received one comment 
during the 60-day notice period. The commenter questioned why BJS chose 
not to specifically reference who (cybersecurity personnel, or DHS 
personnel) would conduct the cybersecurity screening activities 
authorized by the Cybersecurity Act of 2015. BJS responded with 
information about the process it followed to revise the confidentiality 
pledge, including using the results of pretesting that other 
statistical agencies conducted on different versions of revised 
language and coordinating with OJP's Office of General Counsel to 
ensure that the new pledge language fulfills BJS's statutory obligation 
to inform respondents that their data may be accessed by others for 
non-statistical purposes. BJS also directed the commenter to the 
information added to the BJS Data Protection guidelines (Section V. 
Information System Security and Privacy Requirements) that provides 
more details about the Act and the associated monitoring activities. 
BJS is not proposing edits to its confidentiality pledge, though it 
will consider conducting pretesting activities on its various 
respondent populations and developing more detailed guidance for staff 
and contractors on how to answer respondents' questions about the Act.
    If additional information is required contact: Melody Braswell, 
Department Clearance Officer, United States Department of Justice, 
Justice Management Division, Policy and Planning Staff, Two 
Constitution Square, 145 N Street NE., 3E.405A, Washington, DC 20530.

    Dated: May 17, 2017.
Melody Braswell,
Department Clearance Officer for PRA, U.S. Department of Justice.
[FR Doc. 2017-10345 Filed 5-19-17; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 4410-18-P